National Labor Relations Board v. Entwistle Mfg. Co.

120 F.2d 532, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3512
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1941
Docket4770
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 120 F.2d 532 (National Labor Relations Board v. Entwistle Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Labor Relations Board v. Entwistle Mfg. Co., 120 F.2d 532, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3512 (4th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

D0B1E, Circuit Judge.

The National Labor Relations Board (hereinafter called the Board) has petitioned this court to enforce an order issued against the Entwistle Manufacturing Company (hereinafter called respondent) pursuant to Section 10(c) of the National Labor Relations Act (hereinafter called the Act), 49 Slat. 449, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq.

Upon the usual proceedings pursuant to section 10 of the Act, the Board, on May 22, 1940, issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order. In addition to its jurisdictional findings, the Board found that respondent, in violation of section 8 (1) and (3) of the Act, had discharged Simon W. Rainwater because of his membership and activity in the Textile Workers’ Union of America (hereinafter called the Union), an affiliate of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (hereinafter called C. 1. O.). Respondent was ordered to cease and desist from its unfair labor practices, to reinstate Rainwater with back pay, and to post appropriate notices. In support of its petition for enforcement of the above order, the Board maintains that (1) its findings of fact with respect to the unfair labor practices are supported by substantial evidence and that (2) its order, with a modification to which there is consent, is valid and proper.

Respondent, a North Carolina corporation, is engaged in manufacturing cotton cloth. It operates three plants at Rockingham, North Carolina, each plant being in close proximity both to the others and to neighboring cotton mills. Ninety-nine percent of its finished products were shipped, in 1933, to destinations outside the state of North Carolina.

In 1932, a group of respondent’s employees made the first significant attempt *534 to organize by forming an independent union known as the Richmond County Textile Workers Association. Soon after the formation of this organization, a dispute over working conditions arose and the plants were accordingly shut down for a period of about eight weeks. Robert C. Heyward, the superintendent of two of the three plants, helped to organize a group, known as the “Loyal Workers”, which had for its sole aim the reopening of the mill. Food supplies from the company stores were given to the “Loyal Workers”, while the opposition group, the “strikers”, received aid only from outside sources. When the plant finally reopened, an express condition of re-employment was that the employees adopt the basis of settlement suggested by Governor Gardner of North Carolina and “drop the union and forget it.” A few days after the reopening, Superintendent Heyward instructed all former union members that a meeting was to be held at a local church. Heyward presided at the meeting and undertook to explain to this group his “view of the Governor’s proposition” requiring them to give up all union activity.

The second serious attempt at union organization was made in 1934, when an open-air meeting was held for the purpose of electing officers of a union affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. No activity followed this meeting until, in the latter part of 1938, an affiliate of the C. I. O. began to organize all the cotton mills in Rockingham. A number of respondent’s employees secretly joined this organization within a few weeks. Rainwater was among these employees. To further the development of this nascent group, an organizer, Homer Welch, was assigned to the Rockingham District and, on April 15, 1939, a local charter was granted to the member-workers.

Rainwater was hired early in 1933 as a weaver. Three or four years later he was promoted to the position of “smash hand”. It is conceded by respondent’s witnesses that he was a “very good smash hand.” Rainwater testified that he had joined the Union on August 20, 1938, when it was first being organized. At first he refrained from taking a prominent part in its affairs. However, about the middle of January, 1939, he was elected a member of the Union steering committee. This post in the Union required Rainwater to “get out and solicit membership” and to work closely with Welch, the organizer for the Union. As Rainwater was the only one of respondent’s employees elected to the steering committee, he obviously took a more active part in Union affairs than respondent’s other employees. On cross-examination, he testified that he had procured seven or eight memberships among his fellow employees and had discussed the Union with several others.

Rainwater was discharged on January 27, 1939, within two weeks after his election to the steering committee and exactly six days after he had attended a Union meeting in the local courthouse. In its complaint filed with the Board, the Union alleged that respondent had discharged, and thereafter refused to reinstate, Rainwater because of his Union activities. Respondent, on the other hand, has consistently maintained that Rainwater was discharged to make room for the rehiring of Ed Freeman, a former employee who had previously been discharged because of drunkenness. In support of respondent’s position, respondent’s officials testified that Freeman had been rehired because of their sympathy for Freeman’s wife and child; that Freeman had for six weeks replaced an oiler, Albert Ray, who was temporarily ill; that Ray’s return had caused an oversupply of labor at the plant; and that Superintendent Heyward had chosen Rainwater as the employee to be displaced. To fit Freeman into the organization, respondent returned Ray to his regular position of an oiler, transferred Freeman to a warp-tieing job in place of one Davidson, and transferred Davidson to Rainwater’s job. It was maintained by respondent that it had no knowledge of Rainwater’s Union membership and activity at the time of his discharge; that, in deciding which employee to discharge, it had considered, as to each employee, his family and home responsibility, also, the number of persons per family working for the respondent; that the evaluations made of Rainwater’s efficiency, ability, and conduct were important factors leading to his discharge; that his “physical condition” was a factor contributing to his discharge.

In support of the Board’s contentions, there is evidence to show that Rainwater lived with and helped to support a blind cousin, a widowed aunt, and an aged grandfather; that Superintendent Hey-ward’s house was situated directly behind the house of Rainwater; that Heyward *535 had seen the blind cousin, although he denied knowing who the blind man was; that Rainwater was a “good smash hand and a fair weaver”; that four days after Rainwater’s discharge an employee named Marion Dutton was rehired after an absence of several months; that it was not necessary to discharge anyone to make room for Dutton; that, three weeks after Dutton was rehired, another man, Harry Rivers, was hired; that Rivers was an unmarried man who, like Freeman, had been discharged at a previous time for drunkenness; that, although Rainwater wore glasses, he had always worn them throughout his employment with respondent without any adverse effect upon his work. Two employees of another mill, both of whom are members of the Union, testified that in a conversation held with H. G. Bunn, the overseer of the weaving room in which Rainwater worked, Bunn stated that “If Rainwater had stayed out of the union he would have been working today.” Bunn admitted that he had held a conversation with these men, but denied that he had made the quoted statement.

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120 F.2d 532, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-labor-relations-board-v-entwistle-mfg-co-ca4-1941.